What is Ipecac Syrup?

Ipecac syrup is a medicine that causes vomiting.
In the past it was used to partially empty a person’s stomach after a poison.
It is now rarely recommended.

It is NOT necessary to keep ipecac syrup in your home.

In case of poisoning, call the poison center right away at.......
.

What Happened to Ipecac Syrup?

For years, parents were told to keep
ipecac syrup at home. This medicine could be used to make a child vomit
after swallowing poison. Now, your doctor doesn’t tell you to keep it. The
poison center doesn’t tell you to use it. You can’t even buy ipecac in the
drugstore.

What happened? And NOW what should
you do?

The short story: Call the
poison center right away at 1-800-222-1222 if you think someone has been
poisoned. If the poison was swallowed, breathed in, or splashed on someone’s
skin or eyes, the poison center experts will tell you what to do right away.
Local experts will answer your phone call, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Most of the time, you can stay safely at home with the poison center’s
advice. But, be prepared:

The longer story: It seemed
to make sense. If someone swallowed poison and then threw up, they shouldn’t
get sick. This treatment approach was used for decades.

At first, people who swallowed
poison were given many ineffective remedies:

raw egg white;

mustard;

the "universal antidote" of burnt toast, tannic
acid and milk of magnesia;

salt water;

tickling the back of the throat.

Sometimes, these remedies did cause
vomiting. But they often caused problems of their own. For example, too much
salt caused sodium poisoning, seizures and even death. Gagging someone often
caused throat bleeding and swelling. Also, these home remedies were never
reliable enough to be used to treat poisoning. And complicated charts about
what remedy went with what poisoning were confusing.

Small brown bottles of ipecac syrup
seemed to solve these problems. When given to children or adults, ipecac
made most of them throw up within 20-30 minutes. Since at least the 1960’s,
standard parenting advice included keeping a bottle of ipecac syrup at home.
In fact, many pediatricians and health clinics gave ipecac to parents, “just
in case”.

What we know now: It turns
out that a big piece of the picture was missing. Yes, ipecac made people
throw up, whether or not they swallowed poison. But did throwing up keep
them from actually getting sick from the poison?

Recently, researchers looked at all
of the evidence about ipecac syrup. They agreed that ipecac syrup reliably
caused vomiting. They also agreed that this didn’t make any difference! In
other words, there was little research to show that people who swallowed
ipecac after poisoning did any better than others.

In addition, this review
highlighted some problems with ipecac:

There are times when ipecac is unsafe. It
shouldn't be given to someone who swallowed chemicals that cause burns
on contact or medicines that can cause seizures very quickly. It
can be dangerous to people with some types of medical problems.
When such poisoning victims got ipecac anyway, they developed serious
complications or even died.

More and more people with eating disorders were
using ipecac to make themselves throw up. Regular use of ipecac
syrup is dangerous; for example, chronic users have died from heart
problems.

Sometimes people vomiting after ipecac could not
keep down other drugs they needed to treat their poisonings.

Based on these facts,
pediatricians, poison centers, and federal regulators have re-evaluated the
use of ipecac. Follow the links at the end for the fine print.

Should you keep ipecac at home?

The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends
that ipecac syrup NOT be stocked at home.

Likewise, the American Association of Poison
Control Centers no longer recommends that parents keep ipecac syrup at
home.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is
considering a recommendation from one of its expert panels to make
ipecac syrup a prescription-only drug. To date, FDA has not acted
on the panel recommendation.

In the Washington, DC metropolitan area, the
National Capital Poison Center does not recommend that parents stock
ipecac syrup at home. In fact, most pharmacies no longer stock ipecac
syrup.

I hear about activated charcoal…Activated
charcoal is a medicine that is used to treat some serious poisonings. It is
often given in emergency departments and sometimes, but rarely, at home.

The National Capital Poison Center
does NOT recommend that parents keep activated charcoal at home. It goes
back to research. Most studies do not show a benefit to keeping and giving
activated charcoal at home.

The bottom line: Parents,
child care providers, and everyone who spends time with children should post
the poison center phone number on or near every phone. Call 1-800-222-1222
right away for a possible poisoning. Trained experts will guide you: if
treatment is needed, they’ll tell you what to do. They will call you back to
be sure that everything is all right.

For more information:

In 2003, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
FDA Nonprescription Drug Advisory Council held a hearing about the
over-the-counter status of ipecac syrup. The advisory panel then
recommended to FDA that ipecac syrup no longer be available as a
non-prescription drug. FDA has not made a decision (as of 10/11),
but documents from the hearing are available on the web site. Go
to www.fda.gov and enter the search
term "ipecac". You will find the regulatory history of ipecac and
presentations and submissions for and against the over-the-counter
availability of ipecac syrup.

In 2003, the American Academy of Pediatrics
issued a policy statement "Poison
Treatment in the Home" which concluded that ipecac syrup should no
longer be routinely used in the home. Instead, they recommended
that the first action of a caregiver of a child who may have swallowed a
poison is to call the local poison control center at 1-800-222-1222.